TTC protest today
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Seventh in a Series
]
By
JOANN LIVINGSTON, Daily Light Managing
Editor
AUSTIN - A rally against the Trans-Texas
Corridor is set for this afternoon, with
protestors planning a march up Congress Avenue
before staging on the south steps of the state
Capitol.
The rally comes in the wake of a Senate hearing
relating to Gov. Rick Perry’s much favored
massive transportation plan - a plan that has
come under increasing fire in recent weeks.
It was an overflow crowd that greeted
members of the Senate Committee on
Transportation and Homeland Security on
Thursday - and almost all of the testimony
given by members of the public during the
almost eight-hour hearing was decidedly
anti-Trans-Texas Corridor. Also testifying
were members of the State Auditor’s Office
and the state’s Transportation Commission,
including chairman Ric Williamson, a Perry
appointee and close friend.
Those testifying came from across the state
and represented a diverse cross-section of
Texans.
“My land was part of the original Spanish
land grant,” one woman testified near the
end of the hearing. “I would love not to
have to give it back to Spain.”
“We’ve been waiting for you all day long,”
said committee chairman Sen. John Carona,
R-Dallas, drawing applause from the large
crowd still on hand.
“The whole state is going to be one massive
public parking lot and highway if we don’t
find (another way),” another woman said. “I
want you to know I’m fighting for liberty
and democracy (and) where is our democracy
here in this country?”
Complaints ranged from loss of farm and
ranch land that has been in families for
generations to loss of livelihood, as well
as economic devastation for rural Texas,
which many feared will be bypassed and or
cut off by the transportation project that
could - if built out completely - encompass
8,000 miles of roadway criss-crossing the
state.
Perry’s plan would encompass not only lanes
for passenger vehicles, but would also
bundle lanes for large rigs, freight rail,
passenger rail and other utility easements
into a bundle that would be 1,200 feet wide.
Opponents to the project say thousands of
acres would be taken from property owners in
eminent domain proceedings.
“We’re ranchers. Our business is dependent
on our land,” said Rosemary Gambino of
Waller County, president of the Texas
CattleWomen, earlier in the hearing. “I
plead with you that you not concrete over my
ranch.”
“The people in Texas have had it,” another
speaker said. “It’s abundantly clear that
TxDOT will not listen to the citizens.”
The agency is violating its fiduciary
responsibility to the public and lawmakers
no longer recognize the legislation they
wrote that has resulted in the Trans-Texas
Corridor, the man said of the legislation’s
public private partnership component. “This
isn’t about money, it’s about greed. Profit
is one thing but obscene profit amounts to
thievery.”
David Stall of Corridor Watch testified as
to his concerns with the project.
“Enormous financial decisions are being made
as we rush toward private public agreements.
The immediate benefits are attractive, but
the long-term risks are unknown,” said
Stall, whose organization has members in 199
of the state’s counties.
Stall cautioned that private developers of
toll companies could pick the most
attractive routes, set their tolls at the
highest possible levels, use the state to
collect their tolls and be compensated for
any revenue losses.
“I hope we don’t have to wait until 2058 to
fix this,” he said of the public private
partnerships that are being set up as
50-year leases.
“The political process was circumvented and
the people of Texas were the losers,” said
Corridor Watch co-founder Linda Stall, who
criticized the state agency for a limited
public hearing process on the Trans-Texas
Corridor.
“For a project of this scope and scale that
will affect Texas for 50 years, that is
unacceptable,” she said, saying the agency
scheduled 254 meetings in 28 days with
limited public notice.
“If you want to slow down TxDOT, you need to
give them very specific legislative
guidelines,” she said. “Otherwise, they will
do the very minimum.”
Most of those testifying acknowledged the
need for additional transportation-related
infrastructure, but said they disagreed with
allowing private companies to operate toll
roads for profit. Several said they would
agree to an increase in the gasoline tax to
provide TxDOT with money to handle the
projects itself as opposed to seeking
funding in the private sector.
“We need transportation planning, but it
needs to come from the ground up,” Stall
said. “It needs to come from committees that
understand their community’s unique needs.”
TxDOT’s actions since the passage of the
enabling legislation for the Trans-Texas
Corridor have not gone unnoticed by members
of the Legislature, which has seen a number
of bills filed this session ranging from
reining in the agency to repealing the
Trans-Texas Corridor.
“TxDOT is failing to adequately respond to
the concerns of the Legislature,” state Sen.
Kip Averitt, R-McGregor, told constituents
from Ellis County on Wednesday.
“I’m looking forward to watching Sen.
Carona’s hearing,” said state Rep. Jim
Pitts, whose district includes Ellis and
Hill counties - both of which would be
impacted by the TTC-35 portion of the
Trans-Texas Corridor.
“It’s refreshing to see so many members
asking tough questions of TxDOT,” the
Waxahachie Republican said on Wednesday.
“I’ve been pressing TxDOT for answers to
some of these questions for more than a
year, and it’s time they gave members of the
public a straight answer on how the corridor
will affect them and how these toll roads
will be managed.”
Among the several hundred people speaking or
providing written testimony Thursday was
McLennan County Farm Bureau president Marc
Scott.
“We believe the impact of the TTC will be
devastating to the agriculture industry and
to rural communities. As a personal note,
the 1,700 acres that I produce on are all
within the footprint of the proposed TTC,”
said Scott, a cattle and hay producer. “So
this issue is very near and dear to my
heart. My livelihood depends on the outcome
of the TTC.”
Scott said Texas Farm Bureau is urging
lawmakers to use existing rights-of-way
whenever new road or highway construction is
under consideration, provide access points
for landowners divided by roadways and
ensure farm-to-market roads would not be
spliced by highways.
A Texas Farm Bureau press release indicates
the state’s largest family farm organization
is also pressing state reforms on eminent
domain law, urging lawmakers to consider
relocation costs for families affected by
something as large as the corridor, as well
as good faith offers on the land’s best and
highest use whenever condemnation
proceedings take place.
“The delegate body of the Texas Farm Bureau
has voted overwhelming to continue to oppose
the TTC,” Scott said. “Our county leaders
have spent four years studying this project
and attending public meetings held in
counties throughout the state. While we
readily admit that many changes have
occurred to lessen the sting of the
corridor, there are still more issues which
need to be resolved.”
During Thursday’s hearing, Williamson told
the senators that the dense population along
the interstate and lack of public money were
reasons to opt for the Trans-Texas Corridor.
Carona noted that Williamson and Perry are
close, and Williamson acknowledged that,
while offering praise for the governor’s
decision to tackle the state’s
transportation problems.
“I do think a great deal of him because I
think he stuck his neck way out before an
election,” the commissioner said. “And I
will say, I find him to be remarkably
evenhanded about solving problems.”
Carona wondered about the cost and
feasibility of widening I-35, possibly with
loops around heavily congested the
metropolitan areas.
Williamson said 83 percent of the state’s
population lives in a crescent covering the
urban areas of Dallas-Fort Worth, Austin,
San Antonio and Houston.
Carona, a Dallas Republican, said many
Texans have been skeptical of the toll road
project because of the aura of secrecy
surrounding it.
“When information isn’t shared, when open
records are ignored or are challenged in
court, people are always led - it’s human
nature - people are led to believe that
there’s some other agenda,” Carona said.
Some sections of the state’s contract with
the Spanish-American consortium
Cintra-Zachry to develop the Trans-Texas
Corridor were kept secret for 18 months and
were the subject of a court case brought by
the company and the Texas Department of
Transportation. That lawsuit was filed after
the attorney general ruled the contract was
a public record.
The secret sections of the contract were
finally made public in September.
Williamson assured the senators that TxDOT
intended to utilize the audit report’s
recommendations.
On the House side, Speaker Tom Craddick,
R-Midland, issued the following statement
prior to the hearing: “I am very glad to see
the audit concerning the Texas Department of
Transportation. I appreciate its
clarification of the policies and procedures
the agency is following.
“Many members have concerns over such issues
as the Trans Texas Corridor, and I welcome
any suggestions for improvement,” Craddick
said, noting that House Transportation
Committee chairman Mike Krusee, R-Austin,
and House Appropriations Committee chairman
Wayne Chisum, R-Pampa, will study the audit.
“I look forward to their feedback,” Craddick
said.
Cintra-Zachry, a Spanish-American
consortium, plans to build the Trans-Texas
Corridor, a state-owned toll road. The
consortium, made up of Spain-based Cintra
and San Antonio-based Zachry Construction,
would get to operate the road and collect
tolls.
Today’s rally is expected to last several
hours.
“Not only will the TTC be a new tax for
Texans to pay, but thousands of acres of
land will be condemned, taking valuable
property away from Texas land owners,” said
Gina Parker Ford of the National Eagle
Forum, who will be among the speakers.
“Some will come on horses, some on tractors,
and many more on motorcycles - all united
together against wasteful spending,
questionable tactics by Gov. Perry, and a
virtual double-tax on our roadways through
toll fares,” Ford said.
The Australian, a newspaper based in Sydney,
described Texas as “the toll road El Dorado”
in a recent online article that also
referenced “vast toll road riches up for
grabs in Texas.”
A Spanish term, El Dorado means “the golden
one” and refers to a fabled land of gold and
riches. More recently, the term has been
used metaphorically to reference any place
where wealth could be rapidly acquired,
according to Wikipedia, an online
encyclopedia.
Companies from Australia and Spain have been
among the foreign bidders on U.S. toll
roads.
Senate Finance Committee chairman Steve
Ogden, who pushed the 2003 bill that helped
set up the toll road initiative, said he was
“asleep or not smart enough” to recognize
potential problems.
“We are giving away a public asset and don’t
have much say about it for 50 years,” said
Ogden, R-Bryan.
Cintra-Zachry, a Spanish-American
consortium, plans to build the Trans-Texas
Corridor. The consortium, made up of
Spain-based Cintra and San Antonio-based
Zachry Construction, would get to operate
the road and collect tolls.
The Associated Press contributed to this
report.
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